Marketing and People
ESSENTIAL OVERVIEW
“This unit explores the fundamental intersection between a business’s external market positioning and its internal human resource management.
It examines how businesses identify and satisfy customer needs through the marketing mix while simultaneously managing, motivating, and leading a workforce to achieve organisational objectives.
Key themes include market research, competitive advantage, leadership styles, and motivation theories within various organisational structures.“
CRUCIAL KEYWORDS
Market Orientation
An outward-looking approach to marketing where a business focuses on identifying and meeting the specific requirements of consumers through extensive market research.
Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
A numerical measure of the responsiveness of the quantity demanded for a product to a change in its price, calculated as the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.
Hierarchical Structure
A traditional organisational framework with many layers of management, narrow spans of control, and clear lines of authority and accountability.
Labour Turnover
The rate at which employees leave a business over a specific period of time, usually expressed as a percentage of the total workforce.
Core Processes & Theories
1) Product Lifecycle
A model representing the stages a product goes through from initial development and introduction to growth, maturity, and eventual decline. Businesses use extension strategies to prolong the maturity phase.
2) Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
A motivation theory suggesting that individuals are driven by a five-tier hierarchy of needs: physiological, safety, social, esteem, and self-actualisation. Lower-level needs must be met before an individual can be motivated by higher-level needs.
3) The Boston Matrix
A portfolio analysis tool that categorises products into four quadrants based on market share and market growth: Stars, Cash Cows, Question Marks, and Dogs.
CASE STUDY EVIDENCE
- In 2023, Amazon’s investment in employee training and automation reached billions of dollars to improve operational efficiency and labour productivity.
- Apple Inc. maintains a high price skimming strategy for new iPhone releases, often capturing over 80% of the total smartphone industry profits despite a lower market share by volume.
EXAM ESSENTIALS
- In ‘evaluate’ questions, always consider the ‘it depends on’ factor. For instance, the effectiveness of a democratic leadership style depends on the skill level and experience of the workforce.
- Distinguish clearly between niche and mass markets. Niche markets allow for higher prices (premium pricing) but lack economies of scale, whereas mass markets rely on high volume and lower margins.
